Hmm, I never thought my informative post would get flagged, while baseless speculation is upvoted. The parent is pretty much 9/11 inside job conspiracy level stuff. I just stated a few facts about what happened, and how…
Most of the big providers are shit, I wish I could shame them, but alas, I can not. If I'm responding to e-mail from their users, I expect at least my initial response will get through. You really don't need any fancy…
Have you looked around? :)
They will get there on weekend. OPCW was allowed in. Unless the strikes will change that.
You have no clue. How did rebels benefit? JAI in Douma capitulated the next morning, lost everything except some small arms and were displaced north. Assad obviously benefits, he has his territorial control now. He uses…
Probably too early for anyone to have any substantial comments anyway.
All I hope is that the regime didn't do the same shitty thing it did in anticipation of Obama's response in 2013, when they moved prisoners into evacuated air bases, in hopes that the US will kill them.
Just take the info with a grain of salt. Counterattack on whom? US forces in the east? US/French ships in the west?
Thank you Bulgaria. Hopefully the real thing without thickeners will always be available. A lot of crap is being sold as yogurt by the usual multinational culprits. I guess we can make it at home if need be.
Oh, I understood that posting the photo was propaganda, not the actual content of the notes. I guess the meaning of the parent post was ambiguous.
Everyone's repeating the 73% number, like it's some shocking statistic. It's meaningless number in isolation. For example if backpage.com captured 70% of the sex ads market, I'd expect it to also capture the sex ads…
Perhaps a breach of privacy, but propaganda?
Just make the algorithm select a random frame, and it will be solved.
x264 is a software codec.
That's probably why he seems to enjoy it so much.
Even random clicking on these "select X" captchas works. You'll just get a longer run around, until AI gets bored and lets you in. Perhaps it recognizes that being annoyed and a willful breaking of rules are also human…
I just realized I'm obfuscating my internet usage inadverently. Here's how: Good source of reasonable randomness is twitter. I've set up a scrapper for various twitter accounts and I'm downloading every page that is…
That's pretty good. It would require some serious gullibility to defeat. If it's active attack, attacker may send the second mail with the passcode and instruct the user to enter it. Though people are forwarding their…
Many state run organizations have to be compliant too.
Also user can require the service to remove his personal information and that means that service provider has to notify services he uses to stop using and remove that PI. How will this work with Google Analytics and…
You have no guarantee that the domain part case is preserved from what the user wrote, if it's not defined to be case-sensitive. So you can do what you want, but the input data are not reliable.
Depends on the service. I've seen verification e-mails that just contain a link with no other text. Or with texts like "Continue here: [link]".
You don't click because you're educated in these matters. Most people are not.
It's a user's problem. If user is willing to click through some unsolicited email and pay, he will probably click on the verification link too if the service would send those. It's still a statistics game. Not everyone…
Not true, domain part is case insensitive by the standard. Server can decide for non-standard behavior, but that would be foolish.
Hmm, I never thought my informative post would get flagged, while baseless speculation is upvoted. The parent is pretty much 9/11 inside job conspiracy level stuff. I just stated a few facts about what happened, and how…
Most of the big providers are shit, I wish I could shame them, but alas, I can not. If I'm responding to e-mail from their users, I expect at least my initial response will get through. You really don't need any fancy…
Have you looked around? :)
They will get there on weekend. OPCW was allowed in. Unless the strikes will change that.
You have no clue. How did rebels benefit? JAI in Douma capitulated the next morning, lost everything except some small arms and were displaced north. Assad obviously benefits, he has his territorial control now. He uses…
Probably too early for anyone to have any substantial comments anyway.
All I hope is that the regime didn't do the same shitty thing it did in anticipation of Obama's response in 2013, when they moved prisoners into evacuated air bases, in hopes that the US will kill them.
Just take the info with a grain of salt. Counterattack on whom? US forces in the east? US/French ships in the west?
Thank you Bulgaria. Hopefully the real thing without thickeners will always be available. A lot of crap is being sold as yogurt by the usual multinational culprits. I guess we can make it at home if need be.
Oh, I understood that posting the photo was propaganda, not the actual content of the notes. I guess the meaning of the parent post was ambiguous.
Everyone's repeating the 73% number, like it's some shocking statistic. It's meaningless number in isolation. For example if backpage.com captured 70% of the sex ads market, I'd expect it to also capture the sex ads…
Perhaps a breach of privacy, but propaganda?
Just make the algorithm select a random frame, and it will be solved.
x264 is a software codec.
That's probably why he seems to enjoy it so much.
Even random clicking on these "select X" captchas works. You'll just get a longer run around, until AI gets bored and lets you in. Perhaps it recognizes that being annoyed and a willful breaking of rules are also human…
I just realized I'm obfuscating my internet usage inadverently. Here's how: Good source of reasonable randomness is twitter. I've set up a scrapper for various twitter accounts and I'm downloading every page that is…
That's pretty good. It would require some serious gullibility to defeat. If it's active attack, attacker may send the second mail with the passcode and instruct the user to enter it. Though people are forwarding their…
Many state run organizations have to be compliant too.
Also user can require the service to remove his personal information and that means that service provider has to notify services he uses to stop using and remove that PI. How will this work with Google Analytics and…
You have no guarantee that the domain part case is preserved from what the user wrote, if it's not defined to be case-sensitive. So you can do what you want, but the input data are not reliable.
Depends on the service. I've seen verification e-mails that just contain a link with no other text. Or with texts like "Continue here: [link]".
You don't click because you're educated in these matters. Most people are not.
It's a user's problem. If user is willing to click through some unsolicited email and pay, he will probably click on the verification link too if the service would send those. It's still a statistics game. Not everyone…
Not true, domain part is case insensitive by the standard. Server can decide for non-standard behavior, but that would be foolish.